Abstract
The effect of age-hardening regime on peculiarities of hydrogen-assisted fracture and tensile properties in two high-nitrogen Fe-23Cr-17Mn-0.1C-0.6N and Fe-19Cr-22Mn-1.5V-0.3C-0.9N steels was studied. A large number of intergranular (austenite/austenite) and interphase boundaries (austenite/coarse particle) provides high fraction of trapping sites for hydrogen atoms in V-alloyed steel. This leads to a change in fracture regime from transgranular brittle mode in coarse-grained V-free steel to intergranular brittle fracture of hydrogen-assisted surface layers in fine-grained V-alloyed steel with coarse (V,Cr)(N,C) particles. The formation of cells (Cr2(N,C) particles and austenite) along the grain boundaries due to discontinuous precipitate-hardening reaction facilitates predominantly interphase hydrogen-assisted fracture for both steels. The complex reaction of the particle-strengthening mechanisms including discontinuous precipitation with formation of austenite/Cr2(N,C)-plates interfaces or homogeneous nucleation of coherent (V,Cr)(N,C) particles in austenite (age-hardening regime 700 °C, 10 h) promotes mainly transgranular cleavage-like fracture mode under hydrogen-charging. The structural scheme is proposed to describe a change in hydrogen-assisted fracture micromechanisms and tensile properties of the steels with different density and distribution of interphase and intergranular boundaries.
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